In the cartoon, a woman is sitting in front of the TV crying her eyes out. She's surrounded by boxes of tissues. We can assume she has just been watching Murray lose the final. Her husband tells a neighbour, "She's done Andy Murray. Now she's in serious training for the Olympics".

EXPLANATIONThe cartoonist is suggesting that Britons need to prepare for the inevitable disappointments during the Olympics when British competitors lose.

VOCABULARY1. When you cry, tears come from your eyes because you are unhappy or hurt. Note that in this case, 'tear' rhymes with 'here'—not to be confused with its heteronym 'tear' rhyming with 'hair', which is a hole made in paper, cloth, etc.2. If you cry like a baby or cry your eyes (or heart) out, you cry very hard.3. If someone is tearful, they look as if they have been crying or are about to cry.4. If something ends in tears, it ends badly.

In the cartoon, a woman is sitting in front of the TV crying her eyes out. She's surrounded by boxes of tissues. We can assume she has just been watching Murray lose the final. Her husband tells a neighbour, "She's done Andy Murray. Now she's in serious training for the Olympics".

EXPLANATIONThe cartoonist is suggesting that Britons need to prepare for the inevitable disappointments during the Olympics when British competitors lose.

VOCABULARY1. When you cry, tears come from your eyes because you are unhappy or hurt. Note that in this case, 'tear' rhymes with 'here'—not to be confused with its heteronym 'tear' rhyming with 'hair', which is a hole made in paper, cloth, etc.2. If you cry like a baby or cry your eyes (or heart) out, you cry very hard.3. If someone is tearful, they look as if they have been crying or are about to cry.4. If something ends in tears, it ends badly.